Apamvatsa: Difference between revisions

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Apamvatsa
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Āpaṃvatsa ()}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Āpaṃvatsa ()}}


[[File:0048 apa and apavatsapaperVII Fig2.jpeg|thumb|The stars identified by Shylaja and Pai (2019), their Table 2, are marked with red circles on the map of Virgo. The two arrows correspond to Apamvatsa and Apa. The original chart by IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine (Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg) is from Creative Commons.]]Apāṃvatsa (अपऻऺवत्स) is an Indian star name attested throughout the last millennium. The only indication of the position is Apamvatsa is 5° to the north of [[Chitra]] ([[Spica]]) in [[Virgo]]. No information on magnitudes is preserved.<ref>B. S. Shylaja and Venketeswara Pai (2019). Āpa and Apāṃvatsa – enigmatic stars catalogued in Sūryasiddhānta, J. Astrophys. Astr. (2019) 40:48, Indian Academy of Sciences</ref> Shylaja and Pai (2019) identify 74 Vir ([https://simbad.cds.unistra.fr/simbad/sim-basic?Ident=74+Vir&submit=SIMBAD+search SIMBAD], [https://vsx.aavso.org/index.php?view=detail.top&oid=44921 VSX]), a red giant of roughly one solar mass and apparent brightness of ''V''~4.69 mag. Red giants vary in brightness due to pulsation, but the VSX gives only an interval of 0.07 mag in V.
[[File:0048 apa and apavatsapaperVII Fig2.jpeg|thumb|The stars identified by Shylaja and Pai (2019), their Table 2, are marked with red circles on the map of Virgo. The two arrows correspond to Apamvatsa and Apa. The original chart by IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine (Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg) is from Creative Commons.]]Apāṃvatsa (अपऻऺवत्स) is an Indian star name attested throughout the last millennium. The only indication of the position is Apamvatsa is 5° to the north of [[Chitra]] ([[Spica]]) in [[Virgo]]. No information on magnitudes is preserved.<ref name=":0">B. S. Shylaja and Venketeswara Pai (2019). Āpa and Apāṃvatsa – enigmatic stars catalogued in Sūryasiddhānta, J. Astrophys. Astr. (2019) 40:48, Indian Academy of Sciences</ref> Shylaja and Pai (2019) identify 74 Vir ([https://simbad.cds.unistra.fr/simbad/sim-basic?Ident=74+Vir&submit=SIMBAD+search SIMBAD], [https://vsx.aavso.org/index.php?view=detail.top&oid=44921 VSX]), a red giant of roughly one solar mass and apparent brightness of ''V''~4.69 mag. Red giants vary in brightness due to pulsation, but the VSX gives only an interval of 0.07 mag in V.


==Concordance, Etymology, History==
==Concordance, Etymology, History==
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Spelling Variants:
Spelling Variants:


Identification Variants:
Identification Variants: Shylaja and Pai (2019) also discussed the Mira-variable S Vir that reaches V~6.3 mag in peaks, but find it unlikely. Yet, they conclude that the identification with 74 Vir is debatable.

Shylaja and Pai (2019)<ref name=":0" /> also discussed the Mira-variable S Vir that reaches V~6.3 mag in peaks, but find it unlikely. Yet, they conclude that the identification with 74 Vir is debatable.


=== Origin of Name ===
=== Origin of Name ===
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|Lalla<ref>Śiṣyadhīvṛddhidatantra of Lalla, ed. and tr. by Bina Chatterjee, vol II, INSA, New Delhi, 1981.</ref>
|Lalla
|5th– 9th century
|5th– 9th century
|(not listed)
|Śiṣyadhīvṛddhidatantra of Lalla, ed. and tr. by Bina Chatterjee, vol II, INSA, New Delhi, 1981. (not listed)
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|Vaṭeśvara<ref>Vaṭeśvarasiddhānta of Vaṭeśvara, critically edited with English translation and commentary, by Shukla K. S., INSA, New Delhi, 1985.</ref>
|Vaṭeśvara
|10th century
|10th century
|(not listed)
|Vaṭeśvarasiddhānta of Vaṭeśvara, critically edited with English translation and commentary, by Shukla K. S., INSA, New Delhi, 1985. (not listed)
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|Śrīpati<ref>Siddhāntaśekhara, ed. and tr. by Sripada Bhat (INSA Report, unpublished)</ref>
|Śrīpati
|12th century
|12th century
|(not listed)
|Siddhāntaśekhara, ed. and tr. by Sripada Bhat (INSA Report, unpublished) (not listed)
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|Sūryasiddhānta<ref>Wilkinson and Bapudeva Sastri, 1861, online digital versions Google books
|Sūryasiddhānta

[https://books.google.de/books?id=W0Uo_-_iizwC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false Phanindralal Gangooly (1989) in GoogleBook]s</ref>
|?
|?
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|Wilkinson and Bapudeva Sastri, 1861, online digital versions Google books
| colspan="2" |5° North of Citrā
| colspan="2" |5° North of Citrā
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|Padmanābha Manuscript B number 45892
|Padmanābha Manuscript B number 45892<ref name=":1">Yantrarāja-Adhikāra Chapter 1, Yantrakiraṇāvali, Ohashi Y., IJHS, 32.3 (1997). 199–295</ref>
|1423
|1423
|.
|Yantrarāja-Adhikāra Chapter 1, Yantrakiraṇāvali, Ohashi Y., IJHS, 32.3 (1997) 199–295.
|<nowiki>185|9</nowiki>
|<nowiki>185|9</nowiki>
|<nowiki>2|53</nowiki>
|<nowiki>2|53</nowiki>
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|Padmanābha Manuscript A 45888
|Padmanābha Manuscript A 45888<ref name=":1" />
|1576 (or earlier)
|1576 (or earlier)
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|Yantrarāja-Adhikāra Chapter 1, Yantrakiraṇāvali, Ohashi Y., IJHS, 32.3 (1997) 199–295.
|<nowiki>185|9</nowiki>
|<nowiki>185|9</nowiki>
|<nowiki>2|53</nowiki>
|<nowiki>2|53</nowiki>
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|Ganeśa Daivajña<ref>Grahalāghava, ed. and tr. by Balachandra Rao S. and Uma S. K., 2008.</ref>
|Ganeśa Daivajña
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|Grahalāghava, ed. and tr. by Balachandra Rao S. and Uma S. K., 2008.
|183
|183
|3
|3
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|Munīśvara,<ref>Siddhāntasārvabhauma of Munīśvara, edited by Pt. Mīthālāla Ojhā, Saṃpurṇānand Sanskrit Vishvavidyalaya, Varanasi, 1978.</ref>
|Munīśvara,
|1646
|1646
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|Siddhāntasārvabhauma of Munīśvara, edited by Pt. Mīthālāla Ojhā, Saṃpurṇānand Sanskrit Vishvavidyalaya, Varanasi, 1978.
| colspan="2" |5° North of Citrā
| colspan="2" |5° North of Citrā
|-
|-

Revision as of 20:18, 13 October 2025


The stars identified by Shylaja and Pai (2019), their Table 2, are marked with red circles on the map of Virgo. The two arrows correspond to Apamvatsa and Apa. The original chart by IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine (Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg) is from Creative Commons.

Apāṃvatsa (अपऻऺवत्स) is an Indian star name attested throughout the last millennium. The only indication of the position is Apamvatsa is 5° to the north of Citrā (चित्रा) (Spica) in Virgo. No information on magnitudes is preserved.[1] Shylaja and Pai (2019) identify 74 Vir (SIMBAD, VSX), a red giant of roughly one solar mass and apparent brightness of V~4.69 mag. Red giants vary in brightness due to pulsation, but the VSX gives only an interval of 0.07 mag in V.

Concordance, Etymology, History

Translation:

Spelling Variants:

Identification Variants:

Shylaja and Pai (2019)[1] also discussed the Mira-variable S Vir that reaches V~6.3 mag in peaks, but find it unlikely. Yet, they conclude that the identification with 74 Vir is debatable.

Origin of Name

The text Sūryasiddhānta is considered as an authority from the 8th to the 19th century CE, but the author(s) remain unknown. Its date is estimated to the 4th or 5th century. It contains a chapter with lists of coordinates and names of stars, which allows for identifications.

Author Date (CE) Source/ Reference Coordinates
Dh Vi
Aryabhaṭa 5th century (not listed)
Lalla[2] 5th– 9th century (not listed)
Vaṭeśvara[3] 10th century (not listed)
Śrīpati[4] 12th century (not listed)
Sūryasiddhānta[5] ? 5° North of Citrā
Parameśvara 13th century Commentary on SS (Not listed)
Padmanābha Manuscript B number 45892[6] 1423 . 185|9 2|53
Padmanābha Manuscript A 45888[6] 1576 (or earlier) 185|9 2|53
Ganeśa Daivajña[7] 183 3
Munīśvara,[8] 1646 5° North of Citrā
Ketkar 1855 Ketakīya Grahagaṇitam
Candraśekhara Sāmanta 1864 Siddhāntadarpaṇa. 5° North of Citrā

Transfer and Transformation

Religion/ Tales/ Mythology

mnemonic tales and cultural significance

Weblinks

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 B. S. Shylaja and Venketeswara Pai (2019). Āpa and Apāṃvatsa – enigmatic stars catalogued in Sūryasiddhānta, J. Astrophys. Astr. (2019) 40:48, Indian Academy of Sciences
  2. Śiṣyadhīvṛddhidatantra of Lalla, ed. and tr. by Bina Chatterjee, vol II, INSA, New Delhi, 1981.
  3. Vaṭeśvarasiddhānta of Vaṭeśvara, critically edited with English translation and commentary, by Shukla K. S., INSA, New Delhi, 1985.
  4. Siddhāntaśekhara, ed. and tr. by Sripada Bhat (INSA Report, unpublished)
  5. Wilkinson and Bapudeva Sastri, 1861, online digital versions Google books Phanindralal Gangooly (1989) in GoogleBooks
  6. 6.0 6.1 Yantrarāja-Adhikāra Chapter 1, Yantrakiraṇāvali, Ohashi Y., IJHS, 32.3 (1997). 199–295
  7. Grahalāghava, ed. and tr. by Balachandra Rao S. and Uma S. K., 2008.
  8. Siddhāntasārvabhauma of Munīśvara, edited by Pt. Mīthālāla Ojhā, Saṃpurṇānand Sanskrit Vishvavidyalaya, Varanasi, 1978.